- cross-posted to:
- astronomy
- cross-posted to:
- astronomy
BH3 spotted when scientists chanced upon star in Aquila constellation ‘wobbling’ under its gravitational force
Astronomers have discovered an enormous black hole which formed in the aftermath of an exploding star a mere 2,000 light years from Earth.
BH3 is the most massive stellar black hole yet found in the Milky Way and revealed itself to researchers through the powerful tug it exerts on a companion star that orbits the object in the constellation of Aquila, the Eagle.
The serendipitous discovery is so important that scientists released details of the object earlier than planned to enable other astronomers to perform further observations as soon as possible.
“It’s a complete surprise,” said Dr Pasquale Panuzzo, an astronomer and member of the Gaia collaboration at the Observatoire de Paris. “It is the most massive stellar origin black hole in our galaxy and the second nearest discovered so far.”
One of the coolest things ai will actually be able to do is find and map out most everything like this in our galaxy. It will be akin to when we mapped out the entire human genome. We’ll have a massive database of all the black holes and stars and planets in the goldilocks zones and be able to categorize out with ones seem to have the water, atmosphere, temperatures, land, and gravity that could really have living conditions that humans could prosper on, hundreds of years from now.
So SaggitariusA is a bitty ball sucker?